Yep, that famous tapestry which is in fact an embroidery not a tapestry is coming home.
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| "Keep your eye on that one Harold" |
But be aware that when the British Museum opened its site for Friends to obtain tickets apparently it crashed due to demand.
I remain ambivalent at the event.
I know it will be a wonderful experience, not least because the entire story will be on view laid flat for people to see it.
But it begs questions of whether it really is the right thing to do.
The “tapestry” is fragile and while every precaution will be taken including transporting it over land via the Tunnel it is very, very old.
And while I too feel the thrill of getting up close to a piece of history I question the practice of shifting such items around the world, when with modern technology its is possible to view something from your own screen, and not have to queue or been rubbing us against strangers.
Back in 1972 when Tutankhamun came to the British Museum on his holidays, we took ourselves off to see the man.
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| King Tut |
The line of eager lovers of all things ancient Egyptian wound around the museum forecourt and out along the street, and despite having made the effort to travel across town from southeast London it was a wait too long.
We sat in China Town, had a lunch time meal and decided we would try again another day, which of course we never did.
Did I feel disappointed? No and nor half a century later do I feel I missed something. True today ways of displaying these priceless objects and visitor management have improved but so has the art of the virtual display.
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| Book your ticket |
Leaving the countless thousands who will be there in the museum to get their 40 minutes of history, marvel at the beauty of the tapestry/embroidery and relive the epich story.
And happily come away without an arrow in the eye.
Now the historical pedants will sniff and challenge the asserion that its a thousnad years old with the counter comment that it ain't a thousand years old. According to my Wikipedia "it may have been commissioned at the same time as the Bayeux cathedral's construction in the 1070s, possibly completed by 1077 in time for display on the cathedral's dedication".**
But then when did It’s coming home ….. after 949 years have the same ring?
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| Bishop Odo |
Pictures; bits from the Bayeux Tapestry, Ticket site, British Museum site and King Tut in the Egyptian Museum in Cairo, Roland Unger, 2016. Licensing; I, the copyright holder of this work, hereby publish it under the following licenses: GNU head Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled GNU Free Documentation License.
*Tickets from The British Museum, https://www.britishmuseum.org/exhibitions/bayeux-tapestry
**The Bayeux Tapestry, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bayeux_Tapestry


















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